> And Mr Buffet's investment company has beaten wall street for decades.
The difference is that he has significant inside information into many of his investments. He deeply researches the companies involved, talks to their owners, etc. He is far smarter than your average investor but he also purchases companies with far more information than your average investor.
This is a great point. Warren doesn't just hand his money over, he buys a controlling share and starts telling companies what to do. Very different from a passive investor.
It's not clear to me whether you meant to accuse Mr. Buffet of criminal behavior, here. There is certainly public information that is harder to get than other public information, but trading on inside information is a crime.
Public / Private information is only an issue when companies are publicly traded.
If you go to buy a private company you can get a lot of non public information. The same thing happens when you try and take a public company private with the caveat that you can only use that information to back out of a deal not make your first offer. AKA, you get to do an audit after the terms where agreed upon and only get to back out of you discover major issues.
I suspect jayvanguard is not talking about Berkshire Hathaway's public company investments (for which I'm sure Buffett does not use material non-public information) but Berkshire Hathaway's private company investments and acquisitions. These make up more than half the company's market cap, I believe.
not a first he didn't its only when you fund get that's big you have to start taking big positions. And fund mangers out and talk to companies - do you think that Neil Wollford does'nt have similar access
And Tesco didn't work out to well for him anyone who follows the markets could have told you that the supermarket where doing lots of dodgy stuff
The very name Berkshire Hathaway came from a failing textile company that Buffet bought control of. Incidentally, he regards it as the biggest investment mistake he ever made.
The difference is that he has significant inside information into many of his investments. He deeply researches the companies involved, talks to their owners, etc. He is far smarter than your average investor but he also purchases companies with far more information than your average investor.